Arrays of oligonucleotides synthesized in the 5′ → 3′ direction have potential benefit in several areas of life sciences research because the free 3′-end can be modified by enzymatic reactions. A Geniom One instrument (febit biomed GmbH, Germany), with integrated chip fabrication, multiplex primer extension, fluorescence imaging, and data analysis, was evaluated for studies of genomic variations. Microchannels used for the array synthesis in Geniom One were not optimized before for the APEX method and, as preliminary experiments demonstrated in this study, the signals were strongly affected by the speed of the process inside reaction channels. Using the two-compartment model (TCM), target binding to feature were quantitatively analyzed, revealing profound mass-transport limitations in the observed kinetics and enabling us to draw a series of physicochemical conclusions of the optimal set-up for the APEX reaction. Some kinetically relevant parameters such as target concentration, reaction time, and temperature were comprehensively analyzed. Finally, we applied the arrays and methods in a proof-of-principle experiment where 36 individuals were typed with 900 oligonucleotide probes (sense and antisense primers for 450 markers), using the ABCR gene as a test system. A new DNA analysis method for studies of genomic variation was developed using this all-in-one platform.